Gleaner_19681023

21 NCR juniors and seniors elected to "Who's Who"
'f he G L E AN E [t i n t r o·
duces the members of t.he class
of J 969 ;md '70 who have been
accepted to represent Nnzureth
in the WHO'S WHO AMONG
STUDBNTS IN AMERICAN
UNIVERSITIES AND COL­LEGES.
Established 1935
"Who's Who" eame into print
in 1935 when the need fol' cre­ating
one national basis of recog­nition
!or co11ege students was
reo.lized. The active pttrticipa·
t:ion in 01Who's Who" has increas­ed
each year through the interest
oC qualified colleges1 demonstra·
ting that the organization ia of
definite value.
is no competition among the
v~1·ious colleges s u b m i t t i n g
nomiuations.
1"he .J;Cnior class nominated 16
girls f1'<lm the uppor half of their
class. 'l'he junior class nominated
5 girls from the top third4 since
their number o( possible nomi­nees
is smaller. rrhey at-e finally
cl1osen by n combination faculty.
student. vote. But, the seniors
vote only fol' their class and the
juniors vote- only for theirs. The
voting took place October 3.
Yalue of title
''Who's Who Among Students"
a-enders a scr·vice not onlr to Us
members by giving them assis·
tancc in making employment e:on­t;
tcts and supplying reconunen­dntions
but it nlso sct·vcs ns a
goal to inspil-e all students to
pet·fonn to the best. or t.heir
ability. ft. establishes :t stundnt'(l
or nlcasurcmcnt ror students
comparable to other l'Ccogni:r.ed
scholal'ship otoganizations.
'fbe twent}•·onc girls who ha,·e
merited the honor include: Judith
Anderson, a resident ot Balti·
rnot'C, Maryland, who has m..1.jor·
cd in speech correction. Judy's
rontributions Lo NAzal'elh in the
paSt roUL" )'C81'S have includ~d:
Student Council l'l.'!present.ative
in sophomore y~a.r, Aendcmie Co­ordinator
in her junior year. Judy
is prt&e-nt1y prcsidt!nt of her se·
nior class.
The students scholarship, lead­ership
and cooperation in eduen­tional
aud extracun·icular activi­ties,
her general citizenship and
her promise of (uture usefulness
at-e decisive factors for selection .
rro coniine t.he nominations to un
exceptional group of students,
each participating institution is
assigned n. quota. b.."lsed UJMm its
current enrollment. Thus t.here
NAZAAETN CDLLEOI DF AOCWESTER .. Barbaril Bromm, a nntive of
Highlnnd Falls, New York, hns
been a representative to the Stu·
dent Fatuity committee and a
member of the SIGILLUM staff.
l!:nglish is Uatbal'a's major fielrl
nr !rtudy and she chose Erluc:a­tion
a10 n related field. Vol. •¥i]CA': No. 6
Cantonsville: behind the scenes
Reverend Dan Bert·igan1 one of
the Catonsville nine had agreed
to take part in the Poets for
Peace a-eading at Naz.nreth this
F1·jday. Beraigan, currently !ree
on bail cannot leave Un1timore
however. Consequently, his poet.r)'
wilJ probably be read by a mem­ber
of the English department.
Here is nn account of the Uial.
By BOUBY El!GER
College l'rtss Service
BALTIMORE (CPS)-On May
l7, 1968, nine clergy and lny
Catholic nnti·war activists na·
[>aimed the t-A, 1-Y and 2-A
d1':1H files of Locnl lloar<l 33 in
Catonsville, Md. They we:re im­mediately
:.trrestcd nnd indjcted
for damagtng U.S. property vnJu.
ed nt more than $100. destl'OYing
govrrnment. records, in~rering
with t.hc administration of the
Sclccth·e Sen~ice System, and con·
spiraey to do all the :lbovP.,
Tn an unusual tri:~l last week
;unid:st antiwar rallies, the nine
were convicted on tbe first three
counts, and now face maximum
f')cnt-tlties of 18 years in prison and
522,000 fines.
.. Catons,·ill ~ Nin~''
During the summer the nin<'
organized lhe "Catonsville Nine,'
Defense Committee to raise mon­ey~
publiciz.e the actiOJJ, and in,·He­cveryonc
to lheir trial. The ef.
fol'ts l'CSUit<!d in n solicl week o(
JU-otest activities in Bnltlmol'e in­volving
Lhousa.nds o( people from
across thC!' c·ountry. Prie${S.
SOSez·s. ))l'o!essors. nuns, stu­,
Jent.s, seminaz·ians, and house­wives
be~n an;ving the weekend
or Oct. 5.
Meanwhile the Mn1·yland au­thorities
decided to get a piece
or l.he action by indicting thr
''Cat-onsville Nine" on State sabo­tage
charges for the same May 1?
action. Sunday night, ~fnrylnnd
police ftL'rivcd at St. Ignatius
Chua'Ch to arrest two of the nine,
Thomas :'tfclvillc and Ceot·gc
:\tische, who were addressing a
rally inside. f n the first collective
efrol't. of the week, the !nzdicncr
sun'Qunded ~1elville and ~Hsche
and left the church en masse, con·
cenling them (rom the waiting
Jl'Oii<:t.• and poslJ>Oiling thrir a1·rcst
until Mondny morning.
1'he week was mnt·kcd by night.
I)· rallies of the defendants. their
Nixon rally draws
cheers and jeers
lrm')'Cl"8 o.nd thcil· aupportero. On
1'ursday, O<·l. 8, hundr(~ds mareh·
c•l to t.h(l U.S. Customs House in
Baltimore and prescnt<'il :t black
papier-mnche corfin to th~ heo.d
of the ~laryland SSS. 30 draft
c:'lrds wel"' bu•·ned at n rally Oct.
9. Each mornin~ last week sup ...
porters gathered outside the court-
By I<AREN STRENZWITH and MARTHA RILEY
house to wail !or a scat in court
or to hold a vigil on the street
Heading into the home stretch, Richard M. Nixon took outside.
Rochester by storm last Thursday night and was enthusias­tically
welcomed by over 12,000 supporters, including paper­clad
Nixon Girls from Nazareth, and Fisher ushe1·s. Many
county and State Republican otllcials were on hand for the
Throughout the \\'Cck, th~ Balli­mon~
poliee cooperated with the
Nine's :;upporte.n; in plnuning
dcmonstL'tltions, and the eow"t·
house rnnrshnJs were helpful in
political rally at the Rochester War :Memorial. _"""1:_ _._-r(_c_o_nt.,i.n•u•e•d on Page 3)
Nixon cmphat.ical.ly st nt ~d
"America cannot be led into the
70's by men who stumbled their
wny through the 60's. Let's get
'em out", Nixon was met with
thunderous chee1·ing. He went on
to say thnt uthis ndminist11ttion
has &truck out on nil major is­sues.
lt's time to retiro the batter
nnd get a new one up to bnt".
On the question of Vietnam,
Nixon said uwhat comes first is
t.hc possibility of peace, not poU·
tics. As long as Pt·esident John·
son is president, let's giv~ him a
chance to bring this wnr to nn
honorable conclusion."
With reganl to the problems at
h.omc, Nixon stated thnt many
more miiJions of dollars should
ba put on payrolls instead or wel­fare
rolls n.nd uthat if we can't
mannge ou 1· own tconomy, we­aren't
going to b~ trusted to tell
other's how they might manage
theirs."
A8 one heckler cau&erl n sma11
disturbance in the balcony, Nixon
commc.nted that the big dU!or­ence
between n NLxon Rally nnd
n Humphrey Rally was thnt at n
Nixon Ra.lly the cheering drowns
out the heckling. A st.nnding ova­tion
or deafening tlpplause rot­Jowed
this statement. Demonstra­tol's
outside the War Memorial
wcrc ke))t under tight surYeil·
lance by police.
As the R<~lly ended and the
end of the c:ampnign is in sight,
supJ)Ol-tC)i\ recull Nixon's pl~dge
~ "sock it to 'em" a.n<l w-in
in '68.
Richard Nixon spoke in Ro<:hester laa t Thul'tlday. Andi 1 ~7..0 o!f~n
1molher Yer11ion of lhe rally on Page 2.
Colleges hold mock election;
Nixon wins by 91 percent margin
i\1INNEAPOLTS-(ACP) Richard Nixon will be the next
president of the United States accordjng to 91 percent of
the nation's college newspaper editors.
The opinjon survey conducted by Associated Collegiate
Press was based on a representative mail poll of 7 percent of
college editors selected by the research division of the school
of journalism and mass communication at the Unive1·sity of
1\Hnnesota. Criteria included regional location, circulation
and f1·equency of pubHcation. (Continued on l'a~e I)
Oclober 23, 1968
(Continued on Pnge 4)
Who's who! : (front) Oedi Bryfon11ki, Louise DeNeve, K~thy Me·
~ltl nus, (second row) J::uie F'eldtnan. Amt3 Serafini, Carol Oelumo,
Joyce Uimlinger, (rear) J ean Ch ~(hak.
(front)
Cnrol 1\ lLSBk ,
Muy Alice
Coggins,
(rear)
) lary Aamme11
Doreen She~han,
JoAn Uevoir,
Val Portnd:~..
Sociologist urges liberal
view of student drug use
St. Louis. Mo.-(I.P.) "Go ahead and smoke marijuana,"
said the deM, "just don't get caught." Probably no college
administrator has ever given such advice. But Howard S.
Becker, a Northwestern University sociologist. believes that
such an attitude on the part of deans is the only way that
campus clrug incidents can be halted.
'fotalitarian methodfl no good
Recker writing in TRANS·
ACTION. n social sticnce publica.
tion of Washington Universit~·.
does not believe that l"turlent th'Ug
usc t.:ln be ~topped. ustudnnts
want t.o use dntgs and can easily
do so; few college ;Jdministrnt.ions
wil1 det'hl~ to use Lhe totalit.·l..a·itm
methods that would be requil'ed
to stop it.
"One might institute n doily
search or all rooms and JX'I'lw.ps.
in ncldition, inaugur.lte a cAmpus
'5top·nnd-r1;sk' law. Bul they m"l'
not going to do these things, so
student tlrug us(' will ('Ontinu('.11
Beeker beHc:vcs that the deans
are worried about ~tudent. drug
uS(', but tht-y :lrC' more '''OJ"ticd
about thu "Jrrent public-relnt.ions
criSi!t" o( campus llill'Cotics I'Uids
nnd stutlent.s on h ·ial. Yl."t, llecker
argues, thr more. ndminislrntor:S
worry about student drug use, the
more such embarassing incidents
thC'y will h~h·c to deal \vith.
(Conti nued 911 Pag(' 4)
Peace poetry reading
slated here on Friday
Poc.ts for peace will read in the
Art." Center, F'riday Oct. 2S at
8: 15.
JP.rry Ramsey of the Univcr­:;
ity or Rochestoer nnd Shrceln
R:t)' or the Nazareth college fac·
ulty will read their own \·crsc.
Hr\'. l)anict Rerrigan ,,;n appear.
b~'il permitting.
If ncccssal'y, his J)OC.lr)• fo1·
peace! wiH be read by a Nazareth
faculty member. Readings will
also 00 offered or the poetl-;)~ of
John Knocpflc.
Page Two
Editorial
Let no man write my epitaph
When Paul O'Dwyer visited Nazat·eth Lhis month, the
New York Times reported his visit in an article on his up­state
college appearances. Nazareth was identified as the col­lege
"where the nuns have a reputation for being more
liberal than the students". Certainly a deserved commenda­tion
for the Sisters of St. Joseph, this phrase is a rather
frightening epitaph for the student body of Nazareth.
But it does call into question the whole concept of liberal­ism,
which seems to need t·edefining. ft is too easy to shrug
off liberals as "bleeding hearts" or to espouse the doctrine
of liberalism for the promotion of a specific cause (eg. no
curfews, no dress code, smoking in rooms, etc.) Webstet·
defines a liberal as Hone who is openminded in the obser­vance
of orthodox or traditional forms, especially in indi­vidual
righ ts."
This seems to eliminate ft·om consideration those who
wear the mask of a free thinker without thinking, those
who clamor for the dghts of the individual, but only that
individual who agrees with them. Integral to the definition
is open minded ness, since lhe liberal demands consideration
of his own sometimes radical opinions, he is obligated to
give consideration to nil other ideas.
While certainly not all at a college are in the vanguard of
thinking, all should be open to the voice of the vanguard,
no matter how small a voice it is, and the vanguard should
never get out of eat-shot of the troops.
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, per­haps
it is because he helll's a different drummer. Let him
keep step with the music which he hears, howevet· measured
and far away" (Thoreau).
It would be dull to have all members of a community's
subscribe to a single credo. Shouldn'l a college be equipped
with a whole band of drums? d. b.
But Si8le.r, what about the Nazareth image?
'rh.e GLEANEil is published weekly - every WednesdtlY -
during the t·cguhu· academic yea1· at Nnz:.n"Cth College of Roch­ester,
4525 East A vouue, nochcstc..r, New York. Telephone 381·
9456.
Co--editors . . . .•. ... •.••... Dedi Bt-yCon.ski, Connie Farley
News editor . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . Louise DeNeve
Business Mruw.gt.or . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . Cathy Kcr)n)r
Phot.ogt-nphy ..•••... •.•.... .... ... Jean EntwisUc, edito1·
Joanne Lavctty. Marilyn Walcez, Ch~un Kim, Chris Cary
Layout . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . Chris Lewis, edit.or
Karen Scoones~ )f:uy Buz.atow, Pam Murray
Special featw-es ....... . .... . . o •• •• 0 . 0. Andi !zzo, cditol·
Shil'ley Brcwor, t>eg l.t!viek Dillino Per'f•im
Topical editor ... ... . . ........... , , o o ••• Johanna )1oore
Copy editor ....... . ..• . . 0 ••• 0 • • • •• 0 • • • • • Bunn)' Lukacs
&pot-ting editor . .. ..... . ... . ....... , ... . Jnue Feldma11
Consullfng Editor • o • ••••••• • • • • • • •••••• , :'lla•·y Ann Paul
State: Pam ~rescionc, Angela Scarlia, Helen Rice, l .. ::tt Rag.
one~. Joanne Piel'cc, l'nm Murt't\y, Barb Mo}'llehnn, Mnu1·een
McMahon, Judy Angionc, Beth Ei!;enman, Shirley La Piana,
Maggie Knights, Anne Kil'chgusuct•, ~f~;try Ruth Hannan, Mnri-
1'0~ nlum, Nora Hickey. Diane Clal·k, Lisbeth Barchel, Sue
Stiegelbaur, Chris Killory, Rose Sil·ois.
The GU:AN£R Is o membel" of the Uniwd States Student
P1-es.s Association and Associated Co11egiate Pa·ess.
GLEANER October 23, 1968
NSA coordinator discusses
'Time out' day at Nazareth
lly KATHY DALY
NSA Coordinator
An O JH~n Jetter to the students
and faculty ur Nazareth College:
'f'hc National Students Associ­ntion
a-ecognizes the imporumce
of OUI' role as sh1dents. Our pro.
f'o·und effect upon the society in
whieh we live is clearly witnes.s·
ed b)' what happened in t.he last
year. 1'his J)Ost )'ear has bce:n n
frt~strating one for many stu­dents.
Where do we go rrom
he1-e !-is the obvious quest.iou.
.. Time out" day for NSA
NSA, in order to meet the
question directly, plans to set
nside the day o( October 29 for
students ll.I'Ound t.he nation to de·
clal"e "Time out" so lhat we enn
conf•·ozl t squa1-cly the issues that
arr imJ>OI1,;.mt to us.
Na:w.reth will tnke this day a.s
an oppot-tunity to c1-ea.te a con­structive,
informed dialog be·
tween administration, faculty and
students. Whnt will happen on
th.nt da)' dep<:nds upon t.he i$S:UCHil
we decide to organize and act
upon.
Studt'nt Union site of
c:onvers:ation
Lin(hL Nicknish and myself ap·
JU'Oached Administratjve Council
with this idea, suggesting that.
tho StudE!nt Union be w;ed us the
center for lhis public conversa ..
lion wit.b open mie1-ophones, ad ..
ministation, student govct·nmcnt,
faculty and variou$ studenU;
t.he1-e to answer and ask ques-ttons.
We cited n lenlati\•e tim~
between tO n.m.-4 p.m.
Administrative attitude wns
one of complete agl'C{!mcnt that
t.his \\'as the perfect opportunil>'
to dctem~ ine the pulse on this
campus. )1nny people feel th~t
one major problem at N::u:areth
is that the maj ot·ity of students:
do not voealit..e to those who
could change or hetter an exist­ing
situntion.
Perennial political phooey
Sister I lelen Onnicl bas con·
tncted all faculty members con~
cemlug pl-ocedu.rc for clo.sses on
t.hat. day. The>' may choose be·
tween dismissing cl :;~.sses to M ­nble
students t-o attend or they
may devote the class to discus·
sion of impo1-tanoe to both them­selves
and theil· students, fot• ex·
ample, comp1-ehe.nsive exams or
~o:ducational 1·eform and where it
begins.
Areas under discutuJion
by ANDI IZZO
At the Nixon rnlly last Thurs­dny
night, nbout fifty demonstl':a ..
lot·s with nnti-NJxon signs were
fo1-ccd to •·~main behirld n ~><tlice
line or face arrest. When quizzed
by '' selC-nppointed leadel', an es­tjmated
len ptotesters were will­ing
to carry their posters into
lhC' War ~:lemol'lnl and risk :'
visit to the st..'ltion. While his
comrades deb..'\ted ovet exactly
what would be the most impres·
sh•e nction that fifty people
could accomplish amidst twe lve
thousand Nixonitcs, the slLme
self-appointed leader made a
comic but caustic suggestion.
Rnth~•· than cross t.he poUce l'Opc
and jeopat'tlite their peace signs,
he opted fot· stoa'ing the placards
in a building close-b}t and then
heckling the pl'csidentia.l ca.ndi·
•late riudng his speech - "Be­cause
it looks like we'll be need­Ing
these signs ror the- next tou.r
yeaa·s, anyway."
Eventually - or inevitably -
they all decided to form a nice
Jine. mnl'ch up n.n.d down the side­walk
nnd shout uw ithdraw now!
Withdl'nW now!" in one I'CSound·
ing chol'US. As Nixon nni\'ed (tt
the scene, the escort sil'ens muf ..
ned their gn\nd elfoJ'l to a faint
chant t.hat $OUJHied something
like, " Draw now! Draw now!JJ
Also present among the bal­loon
men. Nixon girls nnd button
pushers was one troubled father
(probably n forgotwn American),
whose trir) to the mJiy had
turned out to be a family aifah·.
As ht' pointed to the lonely dis·
sentei'S across the slrec~ he gnve
his daughter hel' first lesson in
Amed can politics: "You s~e tho!JC
young kids over theJ'e? They
hntc Arnel"icans. They hate u.s.
1'hey'1·e Communists!"
Student union
needs 'help'
T<.t the editors:
A lcttca· to an editor orrlinaril )•
expresses an opinion. The purpose
of this letter ~ut"*..sts opinions.
A girl on ~ndcd knee . . .
hnnds cl:tspcd .•. a begging face
looks into all or Nnz students'
eyes .. o Do you get the pietui"C?
Yout· help is needed. •rbe cause
(or this pltnding is the Student
Union.
11-l'itations- have been expressed
o rl the messiness of this room. A
drcsos code needs to h(-> rea li~ed
fol' the "Unlon. What do~s the
dividfl' in the Union mean! Who
will 3J'l'llllge the e •l te rt:tinmcnt. in
.. The Unicorn?"
Do )'OU Ctll'e to he)p in the
c.st.nhli:;hment of a STUDENT ..
RUN Union? lf )'OU do, then an
invitation is extended to you to
parUeipa.tc on the Student Union
Committee. OJ,i•tionated students
nr(' ver·y much welcomed.
Mary Beth Sloan '71
P.S. Meetings al'e in "Tht" Uni·
com" ( r11Lhskcllar hehind the
Union) on Monday nftc•·noons nt
4:30.
When talking rooently obout
demonstmtions such as this one.
.lulia.n OonU qui),pcd that Mr.
Daley or Chicago f:ame should
have his own television progz1nn
nnd cnll it ''Bent the Press" or
;;Mace the Nation".
The-n dut·ing his visit. to Ho·
bal't two week$ ago, he also made
soma tl-ugie distinctions with re­gat'tl
to the three JU>esidential
candidates. If some one were to
fall in !t•ont of George Wallnc:e's
cur, he would promptly J'Un O\'et·
him. Tf n man wero caught in
front of Nixon's ca1·, he would
nsk his chttu(feur to drive over
him. And then thcre'IS Hubc.rt­HumJ)
hri!)' who when faced by
the S.."'.lnC situation, \\'Ould pl'ob­:
tbh· cz·y tl HtUe while Wallace
nnd Nixon did the job.
1 keep t1·ying to console my.
sci f by 1-emembering that"' a ll
news is h::ld news. It's like get.
t.ing up on a r•a1ny day :llld tNI­ing
yom·self thnt it will n~ver
l"nin all day. nut it does.
Nicknish calls
for student
vo1ce on campus
To the editors:
As a t'Csult of 1'-teent discussion
in Student Council and nmoug the
students Oil the topic o{ com·
pt-ehcnsive exams, genom! feeling
seems to be in overwhelming favor
of doin~ away with the compl'c·
hcnsivc system as it now exists.
Foculty feeling ooems to be that
this deci~; i on is the 1-esponsibility
of o. hiemrchy of which the facul­ty
occupies the top position. It
SC;Cms lhat rt t-edctinition o£ the
purpose and Jegitimncy of college
ns an educMional institution is
required. F'o1· whom does college
exist1
Student$ mnke the college pos·
aible by definit ion as well as by
fino.t1cinl eomrnit-tmcnt. ·rhe prin·
ciple .. in loco parentis" has no
tllaee on the mod~m college cam·
pus. hut ,.iu loco paa-entis" is not
merely n matter or r·ules and rc­stl
·ictions. It is an is:sue of deci­sion
making. rr '1in loco )llltOntis"
does not. t-cally exist., thct·e can be
t1o hi('Turehy Uu-ough which o.
minority can hand down a dccisiou
through a m:.jot·ity.
Stullents can not be satisfied
with n'ICJ"Ciy having theil· opinions
heal"d. These opinions must be
nete-d upon and responded t<J.
Lindn Nicknish
President of Undergraduate
Associntion
Coming soon:
. TJwce rnajol' issues are slated
fol· discussion. The suggested
possibilities ineludc: the rele~
vance o( publ ications on campus:
do GLEANER, SfGILLIU)!, and
V£RITY rceoive too much (Edi­tors'
note : or too little) money in
propo1·lion to lheilo t-cpt"esentil­tion
and effectiveness? (2) the
l'ol~ and stl"\\ctur-e of student
government - is it an effective
body'! Does it possess the re­sponsibility
artd ))OWer it should?
(3) ncatlemica.lly, are students
considered second class citizens
in this college community? In
deeisions that effect htl' u.eademit
life, does the student have a voice
-tokenism ot· real?
Tapping resourc-C!i
These are but three areas sug­gested
to hegin discussion n.nd
give it. some tlirection. The da)'
can be as divei'Sifi~l as the peo­ple
who attend. There \...-ill he n
1-ccordcl' prc.scnL to ensure every­thing
t-liscussed is noted. Follow
up is essential. once we know
where we are, we cnn go on _(rom
t.h~re . All segments: -must ~
lt"p1'(:$Cnt~d , adrnini&tl":ltion and
faculty as resourc~s that can be
t..'\p~d effectively. 'f'herc is an
overworked and often misunder­~
tood slognn used toda)•--studc.nt
powel'. The measure of our stu­dent
power and responsibility
ca.n ~ measul'ed b)' the way and
extent to which we use this day.
Alternatives are
offered to comps
To lhe editors :
concc1·ning comprehensives:
1) U they oro optional, those
who wish to ciistinguish them­selves
will use the priv"ilege of
taking comps and those who know
where they stand ait.er four years
of college, will hn"e t.he eboice of
not tuking them; or
2) if u term paper relevant to
the student's major eoncentn•tion,
01' an cndC-..'1\'0r comparable to in.
dependent study, is utilized, all in­volved
win benefit; or
3} i( a point by point di84.'U8·
tJic;>n. with pcniinent facts, is un·
dertakcn by facult.y a.nd students,
much will be accomplished.
opinion comes cnsily. ••patience
and tolemnce. our working hy-po­theses
shift. as we get new
glimpse• of truth, and lo11th 13
never full)• revealed OOcau.se the
human s ituation is changing and
the truth must thcrcfo•-e change
a lso.''
thank you.
Patsey Vreeland '69
The Thing
Oct. 29
STUDENT UNION-9 a .m.- ·4 p.m.
~·············· ···· ·····
Julian Bream, to appear here
on thirteenth American tour
English guitatist and lutenist
J ulinn Bream will be presented
here by impresa1·io S. Hurok on
October 28 at 8:15 p.m. nt the
Nat,areth Arts Center on his thh·­tee.
nt.h t-Our of North Ameaicn.
The noted artist, described by
Time l lagatine as 11the undls­put.
etl successor to the grand
master of the classical guitar,
Andl'-e& Segovia," wHI be heard in
a progi"nm of eontcmporary and
classic wo1·ks Co•· the guitar, and
the rarer music fo1· the lute.
Since his New Yo1·k Town
Hnll debuL In 1958, Bream has
continued to inCJ:~asc hjs inter­national
public to an impressive
stature with an ovcr·all press rc·
action that ranke his concerts
among the most fascinating of
our time. His last three tours o!
North America were completely
sold-out in advance, with audi­ences
equall)• divided between
young people of college age and
oldet· de·..,otees of g•-cat music.
Born in London, Rream made
his !ir$t public appearance at the
age of twelve. His unusual gHtr,
resulted in a vital interest from
Scgovin who not only gave him n.
few lessons bul encouraged his
futuJ-e career. His pioneer work
Julian Bre.a n\
on the lute is credited with hav­ing
revjved rm interest in Eliz.n­bet.
han music which has current­ly
l"eached significant proportions
tha·oughout. the: world.
M.r. Bream has be-come a well·
known figure even in outlying
areas through his many appear·
a.nees on television nnd his nu·
merous highly-pl'nised recordings
for RCA Victor.
Cantonsville nine convicted
(Continued from Page l)
seating the courtroom to ita max­imum
capacity. (The only rept·es­sive
act by the m:u-shnls was clas­sifying
College Pl"ess SeJ"'\•icc as
flillegitimnte press" :md not allow ..
ing this reporter usuaJ pres$ pri·
vi loges.)
Christ convicted
The eourtl-oom was filled cln.ily
with long hair, nun's vcil.s, beads,
clerical collars, crosses, and pence
symbols. The defendants received
standing ovations fl'om the go.I­Jcry
and offered their seats to
spectators in return. There wN-v
numcrou~ out.bunts. of I:LUJfhter
and other breaches of courtroom
decorum which the judge was
willing lo allow the spectators,
many of whom bad traveled long
cUstt\nces to support the 11 Nin~'' in
court. \Vhcn the jury I'Cturned
the guilty veJ-dict a spect:~.lor
said, "Members of the jua·y, you
have just convicted Jesus Ch1ist."
At this, Judge Rozzel C. Thomp­sen
finaiJy lost his Jmticmce and
ordered the courtroom cleared.
The government dt'OPJ>ed th('
conspiracy charge when court
opened Monday mon\ing. Then
Judge 'rhompscn and J)l'OS~Uto1·
Arthur )1urphy selected tho jury
from a pa.nel of 36. To <h:omon­ata
·ate its lack o! faith in the jury
&)•stem, the defense refused to
take pari. in the sele(:tion process.
A jury of average-age 56 was
ehosen.
The opening &tat.omenU, 1\u~s.·
day defined the positions tho two
sides would take during the trial.
'fhe proseeution tried to Hmil lhe
scope of t.hc evidence to the qucs~
tion of "who did the burning."
The defense emphasized the good
motives or the de!enda.nts.
The government had little to
prove. All the defend:mts admit­ted
burning the files. Further­more,
the whole incident was I'C­corded
on film by a TV 1'epo1-ter
ncting on a t;ip Ct'Om an u~nony­mous
source in the pence move­m~
nt/'
Defe ndants' Testimony
The defense eonsiated enUre])•
or the defendants• own testimony
3S evidence o( their good motives
and lack ot criminal intent. Each
gnvo a complete autobiography,
emphasizing his disenchantment
with U.S. foreign nnd domestic
polioy.
Fr. Daniel Berrigan, S.J ., spent
a ft!w weeks in Hanoi nnd saw the
"great destl'\lction and suffering-''
U.S. bombing hns brought. there.
The defense testimony consisted
of an exposure of U.S. complicity
in sulf~ring in Guatemala, racist
attit-udes in the U.S., and the
v·ieioul:lne.ss of the Vietnn.m wn.r.
Recei .... ed in a silent but moved
coUltroom, the testimony was oc·
casionnlly interrupted by prose·
eution objections or the judges'
admonitions: "We at'C not tl'ying
the government of Guatemala."
Ce.lebrnte life
In l''esponse to questions about
theh· intent, the defenrlnnts said:
41\Vhen ~ople at-c lx.-ing murdc.I'Cd
you hnve t.o t3ke drnrnatic action,
but what can one man do'!" "Wf'!
want to celebrate lire, not engage
in a danec of death like t.he U.S.
govc1·nment." "I just want to see
people live. that's all." "We have
learn~l ovcl' long yent'$ the p1-it~
of war; and now we arc learning
the pliCe 0( peace." U] don't WfLUt
the c:hildl-en of the jury to be­burned
with napalm."
Thomas Lewis was pe:rhnps the
lca~rtieulatc of the defendants,
b:tt he n~k~l the most important
question of the trial. HC! was hav.
ing :L h:\rd time expressing his
feelings nnd, nt the htight of his
frustration, tw·ned to the judge
and 3sked, ;;Why does the world
have to be this way?"
A I though tho prosecutors ob·
jected many times to the wide·
ranging nnturo o! lhe ddendnnts'
testimony, t.he judge was deter·
mined to allow the Nine their way
and O\'Crt•uled them. Cross·exa.mt.
nation conah;ted oC one quel-$tion
to each drfcndant: uoo you know­ingly
interfere wilh the admiuis·
tt-ntion of the ~lcctive Scr.·icc
System on ;\fay 17 ?'' The answer
was nlwnys the same: "Yc15".
The government summation
Thursday stressed th•·ee points:
the damage to th~ files was in
excess or $100j the not·mal work­ings
O( lhe board Wt~n·e hinrlcred ;
1\IHI, 1<cgardless or the motivation,
the defendants had no 1·ight to
but11 Lhe !ilu.
Dec:ide on 1•rinc:iplcs
Chief defense ut.t.orney William
Kunstler made an eloquent nppcal
to the jury to decide the case
"not on the bal'ii$ or the Cad.$, but.
on the J>l'inciJ)fes of the issues in·
volved." For the third time during
the trial, he compared it.. with the
trials of Socrates and Jesus. Re­viewing
the ~stimony, he recnll­ed
the tlcfeiHla.nts' moving criti­cism
of U.S. foa'Cign poHcy: "'fhey
did it to hinder a svst.em which
was evil. immornl and dutroying
li\'~S." His erCorts were aimed
nt ~onvinc:.i1lg just one juror to
igno•·e the judge's charge and vote
for acquittal on p1in<:iple.
Answering that effort, Judge
Thompsen's first words to the
jur)' wel'e, ult. is your duty to
accept without question my in­~
rpretntion of ltw.~. 1,he law docs
not. recog-nize:: a highel' lnw as
justification for crime.'' Ho vc.ry
clearly eliminatetl the testimony
of the deJondant.s : "HistOI'Y mny
judge them right, but that is not
ou1· conce rn.''
The jury reached a "guilty"
v~niie:t :•ftel" an hour and 20
minutes' deliberation.
NSA offers
Record club,
job placement
by Knthy llny
Among the student senlces
which NSA offers Nazareth, the
NSA record club is one whith
C..'ln potentially be utilized by ev·
e1·y student. l ndepcndcntl}' con.
trolled, the J'tCOl'd club in\•ites in­terested
students to purchaS(! n
li{otlme membership fo•· $2. The
t'CCOrtl club cites amo11g its nd­vant.
ages:
-a. choice of any LP on nny
label, mono or stereo.
-no quotas tO buy: anywhe.l'c
f•·om 0 to 100 recol'ds may be
bought..
-discounts or up to 79% at'C
offcre<l; prices run as low as 99%
pt'r album.
- all orde1·s are t; h i p p c d
promptly with no walling for
newly issued records.
.:\1embcrshjp c;lJ'ds are avnH­able
in the Student Union, the
mailroom and locker J'OOms.
RECON, the job-fil1ding NSA
system which can aid seniors in
post-<:ollcge placement is one or
the progrruns now avnilable to
NCR students. This organ, t'O­.
sults !a'Om a matching of detail­eel
questionnail'e filled out by
students with job specification
forms filled out by companies.
RECON will be fully explained
hr Jud~· Anderson, '69, at lhe
next SC!nior clas~; me-eting.
A.C. activities posted
What's baby·blue nnd mngcnta,
and 1·ead nil over? You've guess·
it-tJle Arts Center Activities'
posters. These posters have been
begun this Fall as a guideUne Col'
students to plan which progl'ams
thf')' tlesire to intend. Under tlw
dil'ection of the Publie Uelations
Depal'tm•nt of Na•areth College,
R complf'tt- l''Oster of lec:tu.res,
rilm~, And pa1·Jorma.ncq8 J;Chod.
uled iJ; posted nt the beginning or each week.
Tt is hoped that. these J)Osters,
like many other'S around cnmpus,
Uo not. go UJlllOticcd! Any !1ug­gestions
toncol'ning additions of
evenU!: or changes in formal
would lx! appl'eciated by the Pub­lic
Relations Dep:utmenL
or llow much nrf' you aw~n'C?
Apply for study
abroad program
Scanclinavian S('min:t1' is n.ow
accepting np))lications ror il$
study nbt'Ond pl'ogram in Den·
mark, Finlnnd. Non.o.,·uy, or Swe­den
for the academic ycnr 1969-
70. This Hving·and·lcarning ex·
~~· ience is directed towanl college
students, gt'Uduatcs and other
adults who want to become ))art
of nnothc1· culture while ncquir­ing
a second language.
The s'tudents is sepamtctl from
the other Sernin~u· pnl'tic:ipants
throughout. the )'ear extC!JJt dur·
ing the intensiv<! language courses
and the three gene1"Ul sessions
conducted under the supel'vision
of tlw Scminat·'s American Direc­tor,
Dr. Ado1ph G. Anderson,
Dean o! N<~w CQilcge of Hofst-ra
Unlve1·sity.
,.\ family stay earl)• in the ycnr
gives lhe student the oppcwtunlty
to begin using the lru1gu.nge daily
ond to ~hare in the activities or
lhc community. For the mnjo1·
part of the year he li\•es and stu·
dies among Scandimwiuns at a
l'esidcnt:ial school for continuing
ndult education or othcl' spccializ~
cd institution.
The focus of the Seminar J>l'O·
gram is the student's Independent
Study Project in hjs special field
of inter-est. Many American col·
leges and universities give Cull ot·
J>3rtkal credit for the Seminar
year.
For tonlplet(l: infot•mntion write
to SCANDINAVIAN SEl1LNAR,
140 West 57th Street, New York,
N.Y. 10019.
Faculty interview
Sr. Joan criticizes students,
airs views on science, life
Ry !lOSE SIROIS
Knowing- only that she gt-adu·
a.ted !rom Naz.nrcth in 1969 nnd
taught fot· two years at St.
Agne&, I was a bit apprehensive
about intel'viewing Sistct' J oan, a
membet· of Nazareth's biology de­partment,.
The appointment to
meet wit,h Sjs tcr was kept. but
,he was found to be extremely
busy J>l'Cparing Dr.asophiln (ft-uit.
fly) medias.
Sister Jo:m received heJ' Ph.D.
from the Univet-sit)' of Roches·
te•·· Even though the U. of R. is
a large university, ( wondered
how conspituous a black .. robed
person would be and how this
aura of "nunncss" would n.ifect
her acceptance by others. Sister
confided that there. was " . ..
better acceptance by non-<:atho­lics
who npp<lrcntly d idn't have
the hang .. ups concea-ning nuns
that so many Catholic students
(p1·oducLs or Catholic schools)
have.
:'11y )•enrs at the U. or R. ~cr­tainly
made me tcalize more
clenrly !:;Ome of the weird (and
~ntit'('l}' unt1-ue) notions of nuns
which so many people have.
When I taught lab sections in
several biology cout·ses, the ~lu­dents
didn't quite know what to
make of me. They'd nddi'CSS me
as "~liss' 'or "~ta'am" or just
l'aise lhcir hands and preface
their •·emnl'k~ or questions with
no fonn of address at an. A
priest fl·icntl of mine, a physics
profesl'!OI' at t.be Univel'sity, uscrl
to say, 'Well, as long ns they
don't call you -Mrs., they have
the message'. u
The question of the rt·lntion of
women to t.he fie ld of science
RI'OSC. Science. particularly in the
:uoea or grndunte studjes, offers
both hindran~s and benefits.
•cScic.uce is still a man's wol'ld.
\Vomen hn\"c found it difficult to
find teaching or l'eseal'th po$i­tions
nt well-known universities.
But the gt•ea.t advantage of sci ..
entifie st.udy for women, as well
as m<'n, i~ that science is the: one
field whei'C govet11ment money
is free·flowing."
H.e ligion and l':icience-no
dichotomy
One question put to Sister
Joan asked that she disclose a
rec.one:ilial.ion between t.he objec ..
live cncls o( science and the sub ..
jective rettlities o( t>tligion. 1t
seems that by juxt.npos.ing relig­ion
ancl science, the two J)at-allel
Jines f~>rmed never could meet.
Sister feels that thet-c really isn't
a tlichotom)• between the two,
however. The manner in whieh
one approaches the real world
nl)out u!i nnd the world beyond
th is is essentially the e,._'\me.
HJn both cas~s. one is seeking
truth. whcthea· in the material OJ'
the transcendental renlm. Both
l"eligion and the data of science
beal' the subjective aspects o! the
approach which each man b1·ings
to them-but the nim of both is
the same, to find (in the wot'\ls
o( the theme song f1·om "Alfie")
POETRY RI,ADrNG
tonight
rnthskellar
featu1ing students' works
marn kazric:s
j im coleman
bonllie Jizabeth hoag
''whnt's it all about . , , Is it just
fo1· the moment we live?',.
Sees little intellt!c:tuAI c u1· io~ i ty
ut NCR
Sister Joan has definite ideas
aboul the students on eo.mpus and
also about the sybolistic contro·
versy of the student uuion il'On
divid~r. Asked whethea· she felt
that the students elicit much in·
~llcctual cul'iosity, she stated
that. she "hasn't had any expeai­ence
of it so far!"
In elaborating on this, Sister
l'e.lied O'ft her dorrn life last yenl',
40'l'he only topics I evet· heard
discussed weJ'c boys, clothes, nnd
dates. Last spring 6 ot· 7 girls
whom I asked did not know who
Eugene McCarthy wns. ( I see
that from Bonnje .Meath's lctt.cr
In tl1e last GLEANER, thot the
same situation held swny here on
campus when Paul O'Dwyer came
rceently.)"
She went on to say that "these.
points do not nccessatily connote
lack of intellectual acumen, but,
it seems to me, the ewioslty and
motivation of a truly intellectual
human being would cause her to
at least be awnre of what Is go·
ing on ir) the world about he a· and
to have some opinion about it~ ' '
The iron t'Uftl\in
ln 1-eprd to the il·on divider,
Sisler Joan knows that "a real
p1-oblcm of eommunication" adds
Lo the contl'Oversy. Sister readily
:tdmits that "we'd be happy to
eat with tbc students if we wel"C
im•ited. However, we do fee:l lhat
the roculty should hnvo a placo
whe\-e they may eat together.
Alter nil, students and faculty
certainly hnve dirrel'C:nt topics for
conversat-ion, This d*S not mean
Sis ter Joan and bioiOKY ~~·t ud e nt tll.
thnt faculty and students should
not mix. it simply means that the
f~•culty should hnve n pla.ee of
thei•· own. Cnn the Nazat"eth stu­dents
deny us the cot1lCI' or the
student union set ocr by the iron
divider?,
After tho completion of tho
inner-view or Sister Joan, the lit­tle
background infotmation previ.
ously a.ttained became il'relevant
because she possesses and rndi·
ates the 'rlivc for the moment"
essence. It is hoped that at least
u p~trt of Sister's dynamic ex·
pressivencss hos been conveyed
to you. I S.Z\y a J):U"t be-ca.use an
inter\'i('w. espeeially when Wl'it­tcn
in a p.apcr, appeal'1 one di­mensional.
Sister Jonn posseases
3 m)·raid or dim('nsiona) attri·
butes.
Student Council meeting agenda ...
PJ•nyer
:\1inutes
T1·e.a$ut-er's RepoJ't
Monday, Oct. 21, 1968
Oist1;bution or announcemen~ nnd repOl'ts
Old Rus ine.ss:
Yeat•book convention app2-oprintion
NSA time out day
N'ew Ousiness:
Or. Donovan-Da)' of HtcJ"tlturc: for high scltool students
Discussion of site ot student council
Posted pictur-es of council members
NSA joint st.at~ment on the Rights and F'reedom of Students
)·lo~ion concerning faculty and/or administl'ntor as t-otaling ad-vu;
or
Radio pr'Ogram concerning area. eollege :affairs
I Ool!:fO IVUI VCIODer £ .J, I YOO
Pres. observes Founders' Day
with Nelson Rep. discussion
GLEANER announces "Who's who" nominees
Sister Helen Daniel addressed about 500 students at the
Founders' Day Convocation October 17 in the Arts Center.
After a brief introduction by Linda Nicknish, Sister spoke
on the Nelson Report concerning cooperation between St.
John Fishet· and Nazareth Colleges.
The body of her speech traced
the history of intel'college coop·
et-;ltion, beginning in 1961 with
the admission of 12 Nazareth
women to an embryology eottrse
t-tt Fishet-. The· president explain·
cd that since then the reuibiliW
of cooperation has been studied
almost eonstnnUy.
She dted a previous Nel&on
Report in 1961 encompassing all
nrca colleges whieh hns had mueh
influence on Nazareth's relations
with RIT and U of It as well us
with F'ishcr.
Sister H("lcn Daniel concluded
by stating tllot the only possible
coopemtion must occur gt'&dual ..
ly as any growing process does.
When questioned by Mary Ann
Pt\ul, '69, Sistor said that she had
found objectionable the pot·tion
ol l·he NeJson Report tailing the
gonls of both colleges "to un­formed'
'to admit a merger.
She stated her belief that the
purposes or any college, though
having some basic: ideas, must
change and g-1'0\\, with the times
and the needs ot t.he $tudenl.$.
She reitet-nted the need fo1· de­liberation
and caution in chang­ing,
saying that tJte n."ttcnt of co·
operation must be determined by
the common good of both col­leges.
Nixon victorious
in mock election
(Continued from Page 1)
Editors elnssificd themselves as
46 percent independent, 30 percent
Republican and 24 percent OE"mo­ct-
at.
If the election had been held
during the second week or Octo ..
bor, 50 percent indicated they
would vote for Nixon, 37 percent
for Hubert Humphrey, t•tS per ..
cent each lot· George Wallace. nnd
Dick Gregot'Y and 10 percent un­decided.
Only 7 percent expect l:lum­phrc)•
to be elected.
Based on individual patty nffi·
liatlon the survey indicated the
following results:
I. If the presidential election
wc.rc held today, r would vote for :
Liberal drug use ...
(Continued from r age 1)
"All inCI't'ases in surveiHance, or course~ multiply the number of
casas t.hnt come t.o public ::atten·
tion," Becker says.
Marijuana no• bad
Becke.r'a arguments are rnainly
on mnJ•ijuana-smok:ing, which he
5a)'S is mo1-e widely used than
LSD. Matijuana, he says, causes
student health St'tviees much less
t-rouble than alcohol OJ' the nm·
phetamines that mnny students
take to stay awake. while studing.
1' Mnrijuana," Becker says, "has no
demonstrable bad eireets.H
Becker draws on his soeiologital
studies of drug usc to note that
drug-taking students of today are
quite unlike eal'licr tlrug users,
who leaa·ned to be careful about
hiding their hnbit. Todny's stu·
dents, h~ Stl)'S, get taught bceau&'!
they are eithet· ignorant of the
precautions they might tnke to
p1·otect themselves fl'om arrest, or
nrc convinced t.h~t they have ,.a
c:onstitutional right to get high."
Lh·~ with drug!S
"Administrators.'' Becker con·
clude!f, ,.must tuke a culmel' view
of d1'Ug' use nnd students must
become more cautious. The majn
obstacles to such n bal'gnin will be
nel'\'ous administrutors nft-nid to
t.'tke such a step and ideological
stuclent-s who wish a confl'ontation
on the issue. But college adminis­trators
have 1eal'ned t.o live with
&ex nnd drink. They may yet be
able to learn to live w'ith drug.s."
(Cont inued from Page J)
Dedda U•·yfonski is nn English
major interested in jout'llalism.
She has been on the GLEANER
staff throughout het· eollege
years and is, as of last. April, CO·
edito•· of It. She h:~s served as
assistant editor o! VERITY ::tnd
Cot· the past two su.mmets has
worked for he.r homctlme news­papers
in Utica.
~f a ry Alice Coggin3 has served
os president of the Speeeh As­sembly
and \•ice pt·esident of her
class last year. She hns also
served on the Resjdent CouncH.
She is n Speech Cot·rection major
and is a native·of Waterloo, N.Y.
Carolyn Dellnomo of Syracuse,
N.Y .. is a sociology n1ajor, psy.
chology mlnor. Her interest and
involveJllent at Nazareth has in­cluded
Dl'nma Club, work as a
Red Cross Settlement House
Chairman, Sociology Club, Pi
Camma Mu, vice president of her
sophomore c1ass, Student Coun·
cil representative in her juniol'
year. c~u·ol yn has also sc.rvcd as
chninnan of the library commit­lee
and junior P'rom wer-k·end.
Jane Feldman or Lancaster,
N.Y., has served on VERITY and
GL~:ANE R starr, and is a mem­ber
or Pi Gnmmu ~1u. Jane's
majot• field is Pol it ical Scienee
with History as her choice or l'C­Iated
field of study.
Ma ry .E. Hammel is a Sociology
majot· nnd psychology minor. She
Is a nati\'e of Senrsda.le, N.Y.
Mandy has served as secreta.t')',
tt·casUI'I!l", and vice president of
Resident Co·uncil.
Carol Kusak of Rochester has
majored in )iath with accounting
ns h~ 1· reln~d fie ld or study.
Ca1·ol was secretary of lh(!o i\fnth
Club nnd also was a rcprcscnta·
tive to the Student Faculty Com­mittee.
Paulette )lonaehino js a com·
muter (l'om Fairpo1't, and is
president of the Commuter Board.
She chose English with Education
ns a re lated fie ld for her major.
English mujor J ohanna 1\loore
has c:.hoS<!n extr-.t-curriculn.r inter·
ests that al'C in line with her
academic interest. She bas been
editor of VERITY nnd a membel'
of the Drama Club. Johanna's
minor is dl"ama.
Vale rie Porla.da of New York,
N.Y •. i:; JU'esldent of Resident
Council. She has SCI"\'Cd as a dorm
president. Valc.t·ic is a lso a mem­ber
of the French Club and SI­GlLLUM
st.a!f. She is n Prench
majo1· with Education as her re·
lated fie ld of study. Valerie spent
much of last summer in Franee
studying.
Joan Re \·oir has concentrated
he.r education at Nazareth in
HistoJ'Y and Blcmuntat·y Educa­tion.
She has been a member of
Pi Gamma Mu nnd Dmmn Club.
Joan has served as h-easuJ-el" of
he•· f1·eshman class and as a
member of Student Council. She
was chaim1an of last year's Big
and Little Sister Banquet.
J oyce Rimlinger serves as edj.
to1· of SIGILLU)f. She io an En­glish
·Elemcntal')' Education ma.
jor nnd has been a member of
the Dramo Club ond the Undcr­gmdunte
Resident Council. 1loyee
is a. native of Lane, N.Y.
Sheila Sammon of Blambw-g,
N.Y., is a Sociology major and
l'sych. mino1·. Sheila has served
a$ chairman of Red Cross, mem.·
ber of the Soeiology Club and
representative to the Student­Ji'aculty
committee and Social
Boan:l.
Anna Serafini hns contl·ibutcd
much lo the bette-rment of the
soc.inl life on campus. She served
as )>resident of the Social Board.
She was a chee1·leader and vice
president of the French club also.
A1trm is an English-Educ..<Ltion
major.
D()reen Sheehan is a residen~
of "Eimim, N.Y. nnd has chosen
Speech Correction as her maj(')l'
field or study al Nazn~·eth. D-r
reen was Naza.rcth Spring Week­end
Queen last year.
The juniot·s who have been
nnmerl to uwho's Who" nre :
J ean Cheehak of BI"'d<port,
N.Y. is a sociology major
with psyehology as her related
fiehl. In her freshman year Jean
served .as llesident Council Rep.
nnd sect'Clary or it in her soph
year. Tn hc1· junjor year she is
s~rving n$ a resident advisor.
Mary Patricia Corliti.S is a
membcr of Student Council,
speech assembly and has given
her time to tutoring in connec·
tion with the La)' Apostolate.
)fary Pat is a Speech Corrc<:tion
major from Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
Louise De Nev~ a Rochester
t'<lsident has chosen English and
Art as he•· mt\jor fie lds of study.
Lot1ise is Lhe news editor of the
G l.EAN I~ H and of Class '70 ac·
tivitles. She was also editor of
YELLOW T ASSLE.
J( athleen Me )tanus of Bu!tnlo,
N.Y. serves as trcas·u•·er of th~
Student Council, Kathy has con­centrated
her studies at Nnu­t-
cth on Soeiology with English
as her related fie ld.
Maureen Morgan. n soeiology
major a.nd J)!;)'Chology minor
fl'om Manlius, N.Y., has served
on Student Counc:il nnd also is.
Academic: Coordinator. )faun~en
hno been n member of the Red
C)'OSS and !;Ctved as pn.rlimen·
tadan in her sophomo1'e year.
Sam and Dave
at Eastman Sat.
'fhe soul duo of Sam and Dave
will perfOr)"n at the J<;astman
Theatre on Saturday, November
2 at 8:15 p.m. 3nnounces the
Rochcst~l' Civic Musk Assoein·
tion.
Sam and oa,·e ho.vc been per ..
fo1·ming togethe1· as a team since
l9GL In the six yeal's t.hey have
bt.>en Logcther, they have c.rented
a rema1·kable roput.'ttion ;ls the
most exciting twosome on thc
sou1 music SC('ne. Billed as the
" Double Dynamite" duo, thay
have thrilled fans throughout tha
world wil;h t.hc:ir fast and furious
in-person nc:t, nnd they have SC•
cured thetr hold on their rollow ..
el'S with hit aCtcr hit t•ecording
on lhe Memphis-based Stax label.
REPUBLICAN . ..••..... SO% Faculty frolic: a nd the re was blood too.
Sam Moore and Dave Fos~r
both made it the hord way, work­ing
since they we.l'e youngsters
as J)t'Ofessional ente1tainers in
the wot·Jd of soul music. Their
fil'St gold record was earned in
the fa ll of !967 with the sensa­tional
bit 11Sout Man". This rcc­Ol'd
leaped to the top of the trade
paper charts in a few short weeks
and sold ovel' one million copies.
Their follow·up album, HSoul
Man", quickly but'st into the best·
selJlng e1a$sifieation after it wa.&
issued in October or 1967.
Nixon ........ . ... 83%
Humphrey .•.... . . 6%
Wallace ... .... . ... 4%
Gregot'Y .. . .. .. • . . . 0%
Undecided ......... 7%
DEMOCRAT . .. ......... 24\t
Nixon ....... . .••. 20%
Humpht'ey ........ 64:<.
Wallnce . ...... . ... 0\l
Gregory . .......... 8%
Undecided . ...... . . 8%
INDEPENDENT ........ 43%
Nixon ..... . ...... 43%
Humphrey ........ 30%
Wallace .... . ...... 4%
Gregory . .. .. . .. .. • 2't
Undecided .... .. ... 17%
No one ..... . ..... . 411-
ALL CLASSI FICATIONS
Nixon ..... .. ..... 50'~
Humphrey ... , , , .•. 37%
Wallace .......... 1.5%
Gregory ......... 1.5%
Undecid(!d or no one 10~
2. f believe the following man
will be e lected president:
REPUBLICANS
Nixon ... .. ........... 99'.1-
Humphrcy ....... . ..... !'}
Undeeided . . ..... . ..... 0%
DEliOCRATS
Nixon ......•....••... 80'1-
Humphrey ...... .. ..• .• 16~
Undecided .. . ..... . .... 4%
INDEPENDENTS
Nixon . ....... . ...•...• 96':.+
Humphrey . ........... , 4%
Undecided . .. .. .. . . .. .. 0':1-
ALL CLASSIFICATIONS
Njxon ... .. ......... . .. 9Hf
Humphrey ..... . . ..... . 7%
V ndeeided .. . . ••• . ..... 2(}
Events Calendar
October
23 Wed. 8 :00 p.m.
24 Thurs. 7:30 p.m.
25 Fri. 9:30 a.m.
!:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
26 Sat. 7:30 p.m.
21 Sun. 8: l5 p.m.
28 Mon. 8:11> p.m.
80 Wed. 3:00 p.m.
Camat-o D•·awing at. Sisters of
St. Joseph Cn"l Party Nazareth
Collcg.>
Poetry Reading - Student Work
Rothskcllar
Genesee Valley Speech and Rear­ing
Association Le<:tute by Dr.
A. Murphy-A !3
Fnshion Show and Film Ski Club
-A H
~cture on Stuttering - Dr. A.
Murphy A !6
Leetu1-c-Dr. A. Mu1·phy-A 13
l nte1·nntlonnl Planetarium Soeie·
ty l1eeting-AI'ts Center
C<>ncert: The Young Rasenls and
the Brass Buttons - War Me­morial
Lecture:' "ls Thct·e a CuJture in
Latin Ame1·ica '?" Spanish Club­Passpott
Restaurant, Jeffe1·aor:
Ro~u l -.$5.00 l'CSC.t'\'ation
Concert: Eli zabeth Harwood, SO·
prano-Arts Center - $4.00 reg­ular,
student prices available
Conccl't: Julian Bream, guitar
lute - At-ts Center- $4.00 reg­ular.
stutlent priees available
Fisher Soceer Game V$. Niagara
-Fishet·
$650 collected at NCR
for relief to Biafra
The Nazareth committee for Emergency Relief to Biafra
reported a total of appt'Oximately $650 collected during last
week's "Give a damn-give a dollar" campaign on behalf of
the stm·ving in Biafm. A breakdown of contributions showed
resident students' contribut ions at about $500, commuters
at about $100 and faculty donations amounting to $23.
The dr·ive was coordinated by
L.~y Apostolate, with Kathy Dim­mick
chah·man, aided by Mary
Jane Feisinger, Mnry ann Harn·
ett and Ann Ryan.
Nnza1-eth students joined other
an~tt college studc.nts Sunday,
Oct. 20 in soliciting funds on be·
half of Biafra in five O.l'ea
c:hul'ches. F'und taising efforts
nl'e aiming S!)Ctifica11y fo1· a
$2300 goal - the: Amount neccs·
sar·y to send a doctor to the t'C·
belling state a.nd supply him with
Time-out day
October 29
9 a.m . • 4 p.m.
medicine and food for distribu·
t ion tht·oug-h the fnte1·national
Red Cl'oss.
A )fass was celebl'nted (ol' the
intention of the starving In Bi­dra
the evening of Oct. 18 in
Kearney lounge. The theme ubear
one anothers but-dens" was car·
ried out with music, reading and
sHdes. PaL Farl·on, a membe1· of
th~ Committee for Emergency
RcJic[ to IJjQfra accepted a check
fol' the amount. collected duriog
the Naz.a..rcth fund drive.
Tonight·:
Baroque Music
Recital
Wednesday - Oct. 23
7 p.m. studen t perf. A·13
sponsored by the music dept.

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Transcript

21 NCR juniors and seniors elected to "Who's Who"
'f he G L E AN E [t i n t r o·
duces the members of t.he class
of J 969 ;md '70 who have been
accepted to represent Nnzureth
in the WHO'S WHO AMONG
STUDBNTS IN AMERICAN
UNIVERSITIES AND COL­LEGES.
Established 1935
"Who's Who" eame into print
in 1935 when the need fol' cre­ating
one national basis of recog­nition
!or co11ege students was
reo.lized. The active pttrticipa·
t:ion in 01Who's Who" has increas­ed
each year through the interest
oC qualified colleges1 demonstra·
ting that the organization ia of
definite value.
is no competition among the
v~1·ious colleges s u b m i t t i n g
nomiuations.
1"he .J;Cnior class nominated 16
girls f1'aimed the t-A, 1-Y and 2-A
d1':1H files of Locnl lloarOiling thrir a1·rcst
until Mondny morning.
1'he week was mnt·kcd by night.
I)· rallies of the defendants. their
Nixon rally draws
cheers and jeers
lrm')'Cl"8 o.nd thcil· aupportero. On
1'ursday, Oeg l.t!viek Dillino Per'f•im
Topical editor ... ... . . ........... , , o o ••• Johanna )1oore
Copy editor ....... . ..• . . 0 ••• 0 • • • •• 0 • • • • • Bunn)' Lukacs
&pot-ting editor . .. ..... . ... . ....... , ... . Jnue Feldma11
Consullfng Editor • o • ••••••• • • • • • • •••••• , :'lla•·y Ann Paul
State: Pam ~rescionc, Angela Scarlia, Helen Rice, l .. ::tt Rag.
one~. Joanne Piel'cc, l'nm Murt't\y, Barb Mo}'llehnn, Mnu1·een
McMahon, Judy Angionc, Beth Ei!;enman, Shirley La Piana,
Maggie Knights, Anne Kil'chgusuct•, ~f~;try Ruth Hannan, Mnri-
1'0~ nlum, Nora Hickey. Diane Clal·k, Lisbeth Barchel, Sue
Stiegelbaur, Chris Killory, Rose Sil·ois.
The GU:AN£R Is o membel" of the Uniwd States Student
P1-es.s Association and Associated Co11egiate Pa·ess.
GLEANER October 23, 1968
NSA coordinator discusses
'Time out' day at Nazareth
lly KATHY DALY
NSA Coordinator
An O JH~n Jetter to the students
and faculty ur Nazareth College:
'f'hc National Students Associ­ntion
a-ecognizes the imporumce
of OUI' role as sh1dents. Our pro.
f'o·und effect upon the society in
whieh we live is clearly witnes.s·
ed b)' what happened in t.he last
year. 1'his J)Ost )'ear has bce:n n
frt~strating one for many stu­dents.
Where do we go rrom
he1-e !-is the obvious quest.iou.
.. Time out" day for NSA
NSA, in order to meet the
question directly, plans to set
nside the day o( October 29 for
students ll.I'Ound t.he nation to de·
clal"e "Time out" so lhat we enn
conf•·ozl t squa1-cly the issues that
arr imJ>OI1,;.mt to us.
Na:w.reth will tnke this day a.s
an oppot-tunity to c1-ea.te a con­structive,
informed dialog be·
tween administration, faculty and
students. Whnt will happen on
th.nt da)' dep'
to dctem~ ine the pulse on this
campus. )1nny people feel th~t
one major problem at N::u:areth
is that the maj ot·ity of students:
do not voealit..e to those who
could change or hetter an exist­ing
situntion.
Perennial political phooey
Sister I lelen Onnicl bas con·
tncted all faculty members con~
cemlug pl-ocedu.rc for clo.sses on
t.hat. day. The>' may choose be·
tween dismissing cl :;~.sses to M ­nble
students t-o attend or they
may devote the class to discus·
sion of impo1-tanoe to both them­selves
and theil· students, fot• ex·
ample, comp1-ehe.nsive exams or
~o:ducational 1·eform and where it
begins.
Areas under discutuJion
by ANDI IZZO
At the Nixon rnlly last Thurs­dny
night, nbout fifty demonstl':a ..
lot·s with nnti-NJxon signs were
fo1-ccd to •·~main behirld n ~> rea li~ed
fol' the "Unlon. What do~s the
dividfl' in the Union mean! Who
will 3J'l'llllge the e •l te rt:tinmcnt. in
.. The Unicorn?"
Do )'OU Ctll'e to he)p in the
c.st.nhli:;hment of a STUDENT ..
RUN Union? lf )'OU do, then an
invitation is extended to you to
parUeipa.tc on the Student Union
Committee. OJ,i•tionated students
nr(' ver·y much welcomed.
Mary Beth Sloan '71
P.S. Meetings al'e in "Tht" Uni·
com" ( r11Lhskcllar hehind the
Union) on Monday nftc•·noons nt
4:30.
When talking rooently obout
demonstmtions such as this one.
.lulia.n OonU qui),pcd that Mr.
Daley or Chicago f:ame should
have his own television progz1nn
nnd cnll it ''Bent the Press" or
;;Mace the Nation".
The-n dut·ing his visit. to Ho·
bal't two week$ ago, he also made
soma tl-ugie distinctions with re­gat'tl
to the three JU>esidential
candidates. If some one were to
fall in !t•ont of George Wallnc:e's
cur, he would promptly J'Un O\'et·
him. Tf n man wero caught in
front of Nixon's ca1·, he would
nsk his chttu(feur to drive over
him. And then thcre'IS Hubc.rt­HumJ)
hri!)' who when faced by
the S.."'.lnC situation, \\'Ould pl'ob­:
tbh· cz·y tl HtUe while Wallace
nnd Nixon did the job.
1 keep t1·ying to console my.
sci f by 1-emembering that"' a ll
news is h::ld news. It's like get.
t.ing up on a r•a1ny day :llld tNI­ing
yom·self thnt it will n~ver
l"nin all day. nut it does.
Nicknish calls
for student
vo1ce on campus
To the editors:
As a t'Csult of 1'-teent discussion
in Student Council and nmoug the
students Oil the topic o{ com·
pt-ehcnsive exams, genom! feeling
seems to be in overwhelming favor
of doin~ away with the compl'c·
hcnsivc system as it now exists.
Foculty feeling ooems to be that
this deci~; i on is the 1-esponsibility
of o. hiemrchy of which the facul­ty
occupies the top position. It
SC;Cms lhat rt t-edctinition o£ the
purpose and Jegitimncy of college
ns an educMional institution is
required. F'o1· whom does college
exist1
Student$ mnke the college pos·
aible by definit ion as well as by
fino.t1cinl eomrnit-tmcnt. ·rhe prin·
ciple .. in loco parentis" has no
tllaee on the mod~m college cam·
pus. hut ,.iu loco paa-entis" is not
merely n matter or r·ules and rc­stl
·ictions. It is an is:sue of deci­sion
making. rr '1in loco )llltOntis"
does not. t-cally exist., thct·e can be
t1o hi('Turehy Uu-ough which o.
minority can hand down a dccisiou
through a m:.jot·ity.
Stullents can not be satisfied
with n'ICJ"Ciy having theil· opinions
heal"d. These opinions must be
nete-d upon and responded tn. with pcniinent facts, is un·
dertakcn by facult.y a.nd students,
much will be accomplished.
opinion comes cnsily. ••patience
and tolemnce. our working hy-po­theses
shift. as we get new
glimpse• of truth, and lo11th 13
never full)• revealed OOcau.se the
human s ituation is changing and
the truth must thcrcfo•-e change
a lso.''
thank you.
Patsey Vreeland '69
The Thing
Oct. 29
STUDENT UNION-9 a .m.- ·4 p.m.
~·············· ···· ·····
Julian Bream, to appear here
on thirteenth American tour
English guitatist and lutenist
J ulinn Bream will be presented
here by impresa1·io S. Hurok on
October 28 at 8:15 p.m. nt the
Nat,areth Arts Center on his thh·­tee.
nt.h t-Our of North Ameaicn.
The noted artist, described by
Time l lagatine as 11the undls­put.
etl successor to the grand
master of the classical guitar,
Andl'-e& Segovia," wHI be heard in
a progi"nm of eontcmporary and
classic wo1·ks Co•· the guitar, and
the rarer music fo1· the lute.
Since his New Yo1·k Town
Hnll debuL In 1958, Bream has
continued to inCJ:~asc hjs inter­national
public to an impressive
stature with an ovcr·all press rc·
action that ranke his concerts
among the most fascinating of
our time. His last three tours o!
North America were completely
sold-out in advance, with audi­ences
equall)• divided between
young people of college age and
oldet· de·..,otees of g•-cat music.
Born in London, Rream made
his !ir$t public appearance at the
age of twelve. His unusual gHtr,
resulted in a vital interest from
Scgovin who not only gave him n.
few lessons bul encouraged his
futuJ-e career. His pioneer work
Julian Bre.a n\
on the lute is credited with hav­ing
revjved rm interest in Eliz.n­bet.
han music which has current­ly
l"eached significant proportions
tha·oughout. the: world.
M.r. Bream has be-come a well·
known figure even in outlying
areas through his many appear·
a.nees on television nnd his nu·
merous highly-pl'nised recordings
for RCA Victor.
Cantonsville nine convicted
(Continued from Page l)
seating the courtroom to ita max­imum
capacity. (The only rept·es­sive
act by the m:u-shnls was clas­sifying
College Pl"ess SeJ"'\•icc as
flillegitimnte press" :md not allow ..
ing this reporter usuaJ pres$ pri·
vi loges.)
Christ convicted
The eourtl-oom was filled cln.ily
with long hair, nun's vcil.s, beads,
clerical collars, crosses, and pence
symbols. The defendants received
standing ovations fl'om the go.I­Jcry
and offered their seats to
spectators in return. There wN-v
numcrou~ out.bunts. of I:LUJfhter
and other breaches of courtroom
decorum which the judge was
willing lo allow the spectators,
many of whom bad traveled long
cUstt\nces to support the 11 Nin~'' in
court. \Vhcn the jury I'Cturned
the guilty veJ-dict a spect:~.lor
said, "Members of the jua·y, you
have just convicted Jesus Ch1ist."
At this, Judge Rozzel C. Thomp­sen
finaiJy lost his Jmticmce and
ordered the courtroom cleared.
The government dt'OPJ>ed th('
conspiracy charge when court
opened Monday mon\ing. Then
Judge 'rhompscn and J)l'OS~Uto1·
Arthur )1urphy selected tho jury
from a pa.nel of 36. To l'inciJ)fes of the issues in·
volved." For the third time during
the trial, he compared it.. with the
trials of Socrates and Jesus. Re­viewing
the ~stimony, he recnll­ed
the tlcfeiHla.nts' moving criti­cism
of U.S. foa'Cign poHcy: "'fhey
did it to hinder a svst.em which
was evil. immornl and dutroying
li\'~S." His erCorts were aimed
nt ~onvinc:.i1lg just one juror to
igno•·e the judge's charge and vote
for acquittal on p1inl'O·
gram is the student's Independent
Study Project in hjs special field
of inter-est. Many American col·
leges and universities give Cull ot·
J>3rtkal credit for the Seminar
year.
For tonlplet(l: infot•mntion write
to SCANDINAVIAN SEl1LNAR,
140 West 57th Street, New York,
N.Y. 10019.
Faculty interview
Sr. Joan criticizes students,
airs views on science, life
Ry !lOSE SIROIS
Knowing- only that she gt-adu·
a.ted !rom Naz.nrcth in 1969 nnd
taught fot· two years at St.
Agne&, I was a bit apprehensive
about intel'viewing Sistct' J oan, a
membet· of Nazareth's biology de­partment,.
The appointment to
meet wit,h Sjs tcr was kept. but
,he was found to be extremely
busy J>l'Cparing Dr.asophiln (ft-uit.
fly) medias.
Sister Jo:m received heJ' Ph.D.
from the Univet-sit)' of Roches·
te•·· Even though the U. of R. is
a large university, ( wondered
how conspituous a black .. robed
person would be and how this
aura of "nunncss" would n.ifect
her acceptance by others. Sister
confided that there. was " . ..
better acceptance by non-tligion. 1t
seems that by juxt.npos.ing relig­ion
ancl science, the two J)at-allel
Jines f~>rmed never could meet.
Sister feels that thet-c really isn't
a tlichotom)• between the two,
however. The manner in whieh
one approaches the real world
nl)out u!i nnd the world beyond
th is is essentially the e,._'\me.
HJn both cas~s. one is seeking
truth. whcthea· in the material OJ'
the transcendental renlm. Both
l"eligion and the data of science
beal' the subjective aspects o! the
approach which each man b1·ings
to them-but the nim of both is
the same, to find (in the wot'\ls
o( the theme song f1·om "Alfie")
POETRY RI,ADrNG
tonight
rnthskellar
featu1ing students' works
marn kazric:s
j im coleman
bonllie Jizabeth hoag
''whnt's it all about . , , Is it just
fo1· the moment we live?',.
Sees little intellt!c:tuAI c u1· io~ i ty
ut NCR
Sister Joan has definite ideas
aboul the students on eo.mpus and
also about the sybolistic contro·
versy of the student uuion il'On
divid~r. Asked whethea· she felt
that the students elicit much in·
~llcctual cul'iosity, she stated
that. she "hasn't had any expeai­ence
of it so far!"
In elaborating on this, Sister
l'e.lied O'ft her dorrn life last yenl',
40'l'he only topics I evet· heard
discussed weJ'c boys, clothes, nnd
dates. Last spring 6 ot· 7 girls
whom I asked did not know who
Eugene McCarthy wns. ( I see
that from Bonnje .Meath's lctt.cr
In tl1e last GLEANER, thot the
same situation held swny here on
campus when Paul O'Dwyer came
rceently.)"
She went on to say that "these.
points do not nccessatily connote
lack of intellectual acumen, but,
it seems to me, the ewioslty and
motivation of a truly intellectual
human being would cause her to
at least be awnre of what Is go·
ing on ir) the world about he a· and
to have some opinion about it~ ' '
The iron t'Uftl\in
ln 1-eprd to the il·on divider,
Sisler Joan knows that "a real
p1-oblcm of eommunication" adds
Lo the contl'Oversy. Sister readily
:tdmits that "we'd be happy to
eat with tbc students if we wel"C
im•ited. However, we do fee:l lhat
the roculty should hnvo a placo
whe\-e they may eat together.
Alter nil, students and faculty
certainly hnve dirrel'C:nt topics for
conversat-ion, This d*S not mean
Sis ter Joan and bioiOKY ~~·t ud e nt tll.
thnt faculty and students should
not mix. it simply means that the
f~•culty should hnve n pla.ee of
thei•· own. Cnn the Nazat"eth stu­dents
deny us the cot1lCI' or the
student union set ocr by the iron
divider?,
After tho completion of tho
inner-view or Sister Joan, the lit­tle
background infotmation previ.
ously a.ttained became il'relevant
because she possesses and rndi·
ates the 'rlivc for the moment"
essence. It is hoped that at least
u p~trt of Sister's dynamic ex·
pressivencss hos been conveyed
to you. I S.Z\y a J):U"t be-ca.use an
inter\'i('w. espeeially when Wl'it­tcn
in a p.apcr, appeal'1 one di­mensional.
Sister Jonn posseases
3 m)·raid or dim('nsiona) attri·
butes.
Student Council meeting agenda ...
PJ•nyer
:\1inutes
T1·e.a$ut-er's RepoJ't
Monday, Oct. 21, 1968
Oist1;bution or announcemen~ nnd repOl'ts
Old Rus ine.ss:
Yeat•book convention app2-oprintion
NSA time out day
N'ew Ousiness:
Or. Donovan-Da)' of HtcJ"tlturc: for high scltool students
Discussion of site ot student council
Posted pictur-es of council members
NSA joint st.at~ment on the Rights and F'reedom of Students
)·lo~ion concerning faculty and/or administl'ntor as t-otaling ad-vu;
or
Radio pr'Ogram concerning area. eollege :affairs
I Ool!:fO IVUI VCIODer £ .J, I YOO
Pres. observes Founders' Day
with Nelson Rep. discussion
GLEANER announces "Who's who" nominees
Sister Helen Daniel addressed about 500 students at the
Founders' Day Convocation October 17 in the Arts Center.
After a brief introduction by Linda Nicknish, Sister spoke
on the Nelson Report concerning cooperation between St.
John Fishet· and Nazareth Colleges.
The body of her speech traced
the history of intel'college coop·
et-;ltion, beginning in 1961 with
the admission of 12 Nazareth
women to an embryology eottrse
t-tt Fishet-. The· president explain·
cd that since then the reuibiliW
of cooperation has been studied
almost eonstnnUy.
She dted a previous Nel&on
Report in 1961 encompassing all
nrca colleges whieh hns had mueh
influence on Nazareth's relations
with RIT and U of It as well us
with F'ishcr.
Sister H("lcn Daniel concluded
by stating tllot the only possible
coopemtion must occur gt'&dual ..
ly as any growing process does.
When questioned by Mary Ann
Pt\ul, '69, Sistor said that she had
found objectionable the pot·tion
ol l·he NeJson Report tailing the
gonls of both colleges "to un­formed'
'to admit a merger.
She stated her belief that the
purposes or any college, though
having some basic: ideas, must
change and g-1'0\\, with the times
and the needs ot t.he $tudenl.$.
She reitet-nted the need fo1· de­liberation
and caution in chang­ing,
saying that tJte n."ttcnt of co·
operation must be determined by
the common good of both col­leges.
Nixon victorious
in mock election
(Continued from Page 1)
Editors elnssificd themselves as
46 percent independent, 30 percent
Republican and 24 percent OE"mo­ct-
at.
If the election had been held
during the second week or Octo ..
bor, 50 percent indicated they
would vote for Nixon, 37 percent
for Hubert Humphrey, t•tS per ..
cent each lot· George Wallace. nnd
Dick Gregot'Y and 10 percent un­decided.
Only 7 percent expect l:lum­phrc)•
to be elected.
Based on individual patty nffi·
liatlon the survey indicated the
following results:
I. If the presidential election
wc.rc held today, r would vote for :
Liberal drug use ...
(Continued from r age 1)
"All inCI't'ases in surveiHance, or course~ multiply the number of
casas t.hnt come t.o public ::atten·
tion," Becker says.
Marijuana no• bad
Becke.r'a arguments are rnainly
on mnJ•ijuana-smok:ing, which he
5a)'S is mo1-e widely used than
LSD. Matijuana, he says, causes
student health St'tviees much less
t-rouble than alcohol OJ' the nm·
phetamines that mnny students
take to stay awake. while studing.
1' Mnrijuana," Becker says, "has no
demonstrable bad eireets.H
Becker draws on his soeiologital
studies of drug usc to note that
drug-taking students of today are
quite unlike eal'licr tlrug users,
who leaa·ned to be careful about
hiding their hnbit. Todny's stu·
dents, h~ Stl)'S, get taught bceau&'!
they are eithet· ignorant of the
precautions they might tnke to
p1·otect themselves fl'om arrest, or
nrc convinced t.h~t they have ,.a
c:onstitutional right to get high."
Lh·~ with drug!S
"Administrators.'' Becker con·
clude!f, ,.must tuke a culmel' view
of d1'Ug' use nnd students must
become more cautious. The majn
obstacles to such n bal'gnin will be
nel'\'ous administrutors nft-nid to
t.'tke such a step and ideological
stuclent-s who wish a confl'ontation
on the issue. But college adminis­trators
have 1eal'ned t.o live with
&ex nnd drink. They may yet be
able to learn to live w'ith drug.s."
(Cont inued from Page J)
Dedda U•·yfonski is nn English
major interested in jout'llalism.
She has been on the GLEANER
staff throughout het· eollege
years and is, as of last. April, CO·
edito•· of It. She h:~s served as
assistant editor o! VERITY ::tnd
Cot· the past two su.mmets has
worked for he.r homctlme news­papers
in Utica.
~f a ry Alice Coggin3 has served
os president of the Speeeh As­sembly
and \•ice pt·esident of her
class last year. She hns also
served on the Resjdent CouncH.
She is n Speech Cot·rection major
and is a native·of Waterloo, N.Y.
Carolyn Dellnomo of Syracuse,
N.Y .. is a sociology n1ajor, psy.
chology mlnor. Her interest and
involveJllent at Nazareth has in­cluded
Dl'nma Club, work as a
Red Cross Settlement House
Chairman, Sociology Club, Pi
Camma Mu, vice president of her
sophomore c1ass, Student Coun·
cil representative in her juniol'
year. c~u·ol yn has also sc.rvcd as
chninnan of the library commit­lee
and junior P'rom wer-k·end.
Jane Feldman or Lancaster,
N.Y., has served on VERITY and
GL~:ANE R starr, and is a mem­ber
or Pi Gnmmu ~1u. Jane's
majot• field is Pol it ical Scienee
with History as her choice or l'C­Iated
field of study.
Ma ry .E. Hammel is a Sociology
majot· nnd psychology minor. She
Is a nati\'e of Senrsda.le, N.Y.
Mandy has served as secreta.t')',
tt·casUI'I!l", and vice president of
Resident Co·uncil.
Carol Kusak of Rochester has
majored in )iath with accounting
ns h~ 1· reln~d fie ld or study.
Ca1·ol was secretary of lh(!o i\fnth
Club nnd also was a rcprcscnta·
tive to the Student Faculty Com­mittee.
Paulette )lonaehino js a com·
muter (l'om Fairpo1't, and is
president of the Commuter Board.
She chose English with Education
ns a re lated fie ld for her major.
English mujor J ohanna 1\loore
has c:.hoSresident of the Social Board.
She was a chee1·leader and vice
president of the French club also.
A1trm is an English-Educ..en Logcther, they have c.rented
a rema1·kable roput.'ttion ;ls the
most exciting twosome on thc
sou1 music SC('ne. Billed as the
" Double Dynamite" duo, thay
have thrilled fans throughout tha
world wil;h t.hc:ir fast and furious
in-person nc:t, nnd they have SC•
cured thetr hold on their rollow ..
el'S with hit aCtcr hit t•ecording
on lhe Memphis-based Stax label.
REPUBLICAN . ..••..... SO% Faculty frolic: a nd the re was blood too.
Sam Moore and Dave Fos~r
both made it the hord way, work­ing
since they we.l'e youngsters
as J)t'Ofessional ente1tainers in
the wot·Jd of soul music. Their
fil'St gold record was earned in
the fa ll of !967 with the sensa­tional
bit 11Sout Man". This rcc­Ol'd
leaped to the top of the trade
paper charts in a few short weeks
and sold ovel' one million copies.
Their follow·up album, HSoul
Man", quickly but'st into the best·
selJlng e1a$sifieation after it wa.&
issued in October or 1967.
Nixon ........ . ... 83%
Humphrey .•.... . . 6%
Wallace ... .... . ... 4%
Gregot'Y .. . .. .. • . . . 0%
Undecided ......... 7%
DEMOCRAT . .. ......... 24\t
Nixon ....... . .••. 20%
Humpht'ey ........ 64: p.m.
80 Wed. 3:00 p.m.
Camat-o D•·awing at. Sisters of
St. Joseph Cn"l Party Nazareth
Collcg.>
Poetry Reading - Student Work
Rothskcllar
Genesee Valley Speech and Rear­ing
Association Lencert: The Young Rasenls and
the Brass Buttons - War Me­morial
Lecture:' "ls Thct·e a CuJture in
Latin Ame1·ica '?" Spanish Club­Passpott
Restaurant, Jeffe1·aor:
Ro~u l -.$5.00 l'CSC.t'\'ation
Concert: Eli zabeth Harwood, SO·
prano-Arts Center - $4.00 reg­ular,
student prices available
Conccl't: Julian Bream, guitar
lute - At-ts Center- $4.00 reg­ular.
stutlent priees available
Fisher Soceer Game V$. Niagara
-Fishet·
$650 collected at NCR
for relief to Biafra
The Nazareth committee for Emergency Relief to Biafra
reported a total of appt'Oximately $650 collected during last
week's "Give a damn-give a dollar" campaign on behalf of
the stm·ving in Biafm. A breakdown of contributions showed
resident students' contribut ions at about $500, commuters
at about $100 and faculty donations amounting to $23.
The dr·ive was coordinated by
L.~y Apostolate, with Kathy Dim­mick
chah·man, aided by Mary
Jane Feisinger, Mnry ann Harn·
ett and Ann Ryan.
Nnza1-eth students joined other
an~tt college studc.nts Sunday,
Oct. 20 in soliciting funds on be·
half of Biafra in five O.l'ea
c:hul'ches. F'und taising efforts
nl'e aiming S!)Ctifica11y fo1· a
$2300 goal - the: Amount neccs·
sar·y to send a doctor to the t'C·
belling state a.nd supply him with
Time-out day
October 29
9 a.m . • 4 p.m.
medicine and food for distribu·
t ion tht·oug-h the fnte1·national
Red Cl'oss.
A )fass was celebl'nted (ol' the
intention of the starving In Bi­dra
the evening of Oct. 18 in
Kearney lounge. The theme ubear
one anothers but-dens" was car·
ried out with music, reading and
sHdes. PaL Farl·on, a membe1· of
th~ Committee for Emergency
RcJic[ to IJjQfra accepted a check
fol' the amount. collected duriog
the Naz.a..rcth fund drive.
Tonight·:
Baroque Music
Recital
Wednesday - Oct. 23
7 p.m. studen t perf. A·13
sponsored by the music dept.